Home » Archive of beloved CBC show Writers & Company comes to SFU

Archive of beloved CBC show Writers & Company comes to SFU

Eleanor Wachtel, host of Writers & Company. Photo credit: CBC.
Eleanor Wachtel, host of Writers & Company. Photo credit: CBC

SFU Library is delighted to be the new home of the complete digital archive of Writers & Company, CBC’s flagship literary program, hosted by Eleanor Wachtel for 33 years.

Thanks to an extraordinary partnership with the CBC, researchers and the public alike will be able to freely access this important and prestigious collection on the SFU Library website.

A sample of digitized Writers & Company episodes are available now in the audio collection, and the entire run of the program will become available in the archive between 2024-2026. Here's a sneak peek!

Over 30 years of unique, in-depth interviews

CBC’s Writers & Company archive comprises 1,000+ hours of Wachtel’s intimate, in-depth interviews with authors, writers, and thinkers from around the world whose ideas and perspectives have impacted the contemporary English language literary ecosystem. The material is an invaluable resource for students and researchers of literature, gender studies, politics, and culture as well as for readers and listeners worldwide.

The very first episode of the renowned program was an hour-long interview with South African author and Nobel Prize winner Nadine Gordimer in 1991. In the decades since, Wachtel interviewed an astonishing array of individuals, including Carol Shields, Michael Ondaatje, John le Carré, Toni Morrison, Kazuo Ishiguro, Zadie Smith, and many more.

In her retirement announcement on CBC in April 2023, Wachtel shared the news that Writers & Company was coming to a close; the final original episode aired in June 2023.

Bringing a rich cultural legacy to SFU

Wachtel holds an honorary degree from SFU, conferred in 2007, and is also a former adjunct professor in SFU’s Women’s Studies department, now known as Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies.

“Over more than three decades, I’ve had the privilege to speak with some of the most exceptional writers of our time, from Canada and around the world,” observes Wachtel. “To devote a whole hour to a single author, filmmaker, artist or great thinker, to have an intimate, wide-ranging conversation—in many cases more than once, to follow a career—is truly a gift. This unique digital archive also includes interviews with 14 winners of the Nobel Prize in Literature, often before they received recognition from the Nobel committee, and then engaging with them afterwards as well. At the same time, the program has featured new voices—writers who went on to become established names in the literary world."

“The archive at SFU will be a rich resource, not just for fans of the program but for academics and lovers of literature of all kinds.” – Eleanor Wachtel

Michelle Levy, a professor in the English department, calls the Writers & Company collection “an incomparable archive.”

“For over three decades, Writers & Company has delighted and enriched audiences, with conversations that bring us closer to the writers and artists we cherish,” Levy says. “We are excited to dig into this exciting collection for what it can tell us about the history of literature and culture, the art of the interview, and the evolution of radio.”

A collection made freely available online

SFU Library has been working closely with CBC on the transfer of the digital archive, including digitized episodes, born-digital episode files, and metadata for all of the material in the collection in preparation for making all of the episodes available online.

Thanks to SFU Library’s partnership with the CBC, past and future listeners—from scholars and students to the general public—will have the chance to experience and engage with this rich, insightful archive of interviews for years to come. Get a sneak-peek and access the first digitized episodes, here!
 

“We are grateful to Eleanor and CBC for entrusting the SFU Library with the stewardship of this important cultural touchstone. It's very exciting to be involved in the project to preserve and make accessible this one-of-a-kind collection,” says Alexandra Wieland, Reference and Processing Archivist, SFU Special Collections and Rare Books.


This story is part of our winter 2024 edition of Engage, our magazine celebrating the impact of SFU’s donor community.

To read more stories, please visit the Engage landing page.